Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[[Category:Liverpool F.C. templates]] to the <includeonly> section at the bottom of that page. Otherwise, add <noinclude>[[Category:Liverpool F.C. templates]]</noinclude> to the end of the template code, making sure it starts on the same line as the code's last character.
Statue of Bill Shankly outside Anfield.Shankly was the first Liverpool manager to win a European trophy. Bill Shankly began managing Liverpool in 1959, and it was under him that the team first competed in European competition in 1964–65, qualifying for the European Cup by winning the First Division championship the previous season. [9]
Template: 2022–23 UEFA Champions League group tables. ... Liverpool: 6 5 0 1 17 6 +11 15 [a] 2–0 — 2–1: 2–0: 3 Ajax: 6 2 0 4 11 16 −5 6 Transfer to Europa ...
Liverpool won the First Division for the first time in the 1900–01 season, [2] and reached their first |FA Cup Final in 1914, losing 1–0 to Burnley. They won their first back-to-back titles in the 1921–22 and 1922–23 seasons; this was their last success until the 1946–47 season, when they regained the league
Bob Paisley was the first manager to win the title three times, all with Liverpool. Zinedine Zidane is the only manager to have won titles in three consecutive years, all with Real Madrid. Pep Guardiola won three titles in 2009, 2011 and 2023, with Barcelona and Manchester City. Brian Clough won back-to-back titles as manager of Nottingham Forest.
Liverpool's 2018–19 triumph came 29 years after their previous domestic league title . This was the longest time any Champions League winner had gone since previously winning their league, breaking the record Liverpool set in 2004–05, which was fifteen years after their last league title. Barcelona (2008–09 and 2014–15)
The following table gives detailed results of the games played by Liverpool Football Club in international football competitions (European Cup/UEFA Champions League, UEFA Cup/Europa League, Inter-Cities Fairs Cup, European/UEFA Cup Winners' Cup, European/UEFA Super Cup, Intercontinental Cup and FIFA Club World Championship/Club World Cup).
Despite the 39 league titles and nine European Cups between them, [118] the two rivals have rarely been successful at the same time – Liverpool's run of titles in the 1970s and 1980s coincided with Manchester United's 26-year title drought while United's success in the Premier League-era coincided with Liverpool's 30-year title drought, [120 ...